Wednesday, January 2, 2008

'Sheep to visit'?

I have a feeling this site won't be up long in this form. But take a quick look at the primary tasks section of a website for Arkansas Young Republicans. The tasks enumerated include "cars to crush" and "sheep to visit." I presume these items are space fillers for legitimate items yet to come on the website, which appears to still be under development, but still .... WWMHD about jokes such as these?

We also liked Chairman David Fort's vow to work against overtaxing of the middle class. The poor? Who cares about overtaxing them? They're the kind of people who'd probably like that "laughable public healthcare initiative" Fort references.

More by Max Brantley

Attorney General Leslie Rutledge went to court late yesterday to get the state Supreme Court to halt mediation ordered by Circuit Judge Tim Fox in the case over issuing birth certificates to same-sex parents.

The men and women who patrol Little Rock in black and white vehicles tell a story in black and white.

The open line and daily news video.

Readers also liked…

A series of speakers, beginning with Sen. Joyce Elliott, denounced what they saw as a hidden agenda favoring charter schools at the state Department of Education and asked the state Board of Education for return of local control.

Somebody has cybersquatted on Republican Rep. Mary Bentley's website, replacing her messaging with a call for equal rights for LGBTQ people.

Got any thoughts? Put them here.

Most Shared

One of the booths at this week's Ark-La-Tex Medical Cannabis Expo was hosted by the Arkansas Hemp Association, a trade group founded to promote and expand non-intoxicating industrial hemp as an agricultural crop in the state. AHA Vice President Jeremy Fisher said the first licenses to grow experimental plots of hemp in the state should be issued by the Arkansas State Plant Board next spring.